World's Most Giant Economies Under One Party Rule, Soon!

mascale

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Feb 22, 2009
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Nowhere widely known is the fact that I myself am an heir. . . to a founding director. . .of the San Fernando Valley Walnut Growers Association. . .who was a friend of water engineer, Mulholland, of Los Angeles. These people knew enough to pay in cash, even during the Great Depression. When the Walnut Growers prospered, the San Fernando Valley prospered! It made the news.

20 years later, mainly the San Fernando Valley prospered, when Lockheed, Burbank, prospered. 20 years later, mainly the San Fernando Valley prospered, when the entertainment industry prospered. Now the economy and ethnic composition of the San Fernando Valley is diverse. Soon, there will be no Republicans in the San Fernando Valley, anywhere.

California Republicans fear another November of Democratic dominance - latimes.com

No one seems to know any Republicans, likely to run for Governor, in California. The essential one-party rule necessary for China, will become de facto in California. The tilt away from the Republicans, in California and in New Jersey--suggests that possibly the GOP base of Crazy People: Will no longer be a viable force nationwide, in the United States as a whole.

So there anyone now has it! What does diversity have to do with it? China mainly has diverity of language dialects, but there is an economy, possibly mirroring diversity. California has diversity--maybe except in Hollywood. Bitcoins now seem to be replacing Euros as the currency of fashion. Probably that is about as diverse as Hollywood can get. The United States has diversity, and so in all three cases there is one party-rule, not tethered to the outmoded concepts of a 17th Century, Presbyterian: Easily unable to see the economy, for all the lack of diversity!

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Many note one thing leads to another! Many can say that Pochahontas, clearly woman of shame: Embracing White Eyes. . .in name of diversity(?)!)
 
You do realize that the MediCal reimbursement CA exchange network is so narrow that CA will almost certainly lose ground relative to the nation as a whole as it has for the past five years. In fact based on migration trends there is a better than 40% probability that the net out migration is compounding sufficiently to cause the loss of the first congressional seat in CA history in 2020. NJ, NY and I think it is 7 others will either lose seats or turn up on the right side of the bubble.

Based on the reported rate of decline in SDP, going from 8th to 12th largest economy in a bit over five years, something is going on that the official migration stats are not picking up.
 
Mescaline is a funny poster

CA will wind up like Detroit and Camden, another Progressive shithole
 
Does anyone have any idea what the OP is jabbering about? :confused:
His lack of knowledge of trendlines in State Domestic Product. NJ and CA are losing wealth and income relative to the nation as a whole at ever faster rates since the meltdown. That they are becoming more Democratic the faster they fall is supposed to be good some way, how I have no idea.
 
Diversity of enterprise seems to work in the Single Party ruled economies of China, California, and soon easily to be the United States. Even Speaker Boehner has openly criticized Rule By The Crazy People, in the important politics of The Johnny Tonite arena, no longer to be GOP Leno-Land.

Adam Smith could create a concept of supply and demand without a concept of a market-place. Fixed percentage usury works against the market-place, and is an intervention which requires a remedy. If the poor can't purchase, then rich houses all come tumbling on down. That is shown In Matthew of the Gospel Writers. That is Shown in Secretary Paulson--of the Bail-out of the rich--with no market remedy, like appears in Matthew.

The San Fernando Valley since 1900 likely creates the concept of how a market likely worked, even in ancient times. The area was still the Wild West, only a hundred years or so ago. And a River Ran Through it, mostly a dry area, even in the photos. Like in the original Middle East of early civilization, when the dry farmers prospered, the area prospered. The various manipulations that created LA City Water even become a movie. Water would come, and then into the San Fernando Valley, after it voted to become a part of Los Angeles. In the like manner of the creation of the interventionist health exchanges, you could access the new water from the Aqueduct, if and only if you met the certain condition: That you were in Los Angeles City Limits. The San Fernando Valley voted to do that, after about 18 months. Later on, the rise of Lockheed Burbank, from federal and other airplane spending, complemented the other federal projects--designed to contain the flash floods. The area grew, almost like building Cathedrals and other public projects. Later on, there was television, and even the San Fernando Valley studios prospered.

Intervention, Intervention, Intervention, Intervention: Is really what makes a real market work.

"Crow, James Crow: Shaken, Not Stirred!"
(Much Intervention--Really not worth discussing!)
 
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